Bennett Pass the Hard Way Oregon Nordic Club Day Tour

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Presentation transcript:

Bennett Pass the Hard Way Oregon Nordic Club Day Tour Distance 8-10 miles with 1,500 to 2,000 feet of climbing. For those tired skiing the out-and-back on Bennett pass, this is a challenging variant which turns it into a loop tour. We start out with an exciting and often difficult drop down to Pocket Creek on the Pocket Creek Tie trail. After surviving that we have a couple miles of pleasant road touring on a flat road at the base of Bennett ridge. Eventually though we run out of room and take the totally inappropriately named “Fat Lady Trail” up 1,000 feet of climbing until we hit Bennett ridge trail . Then it gets exciting as we cross the famed “Terrible Traverse”, S-curves, slog uphill and finally a gentle downhill finish to the sno-park. This tour has a mix of road and trail skiing. Good fitness is required and intermediate level turning for trail sections and S-curves. Please do not sign up for this tour if you do not meet these requirements. Basic Trip Info Meeting Time: 8 AM Meeting Place: Gateway Transit Center Ski Difficulty Level: Intermediate Dogs are NOT Allowed on this tour Carpooling Cost: $18 (120 miles) Scott Diamond skiing@scottdiamond.com 503.643.6779 (mobile)

Tie trail in less than ideal conditions (which is most of the time) Detailed Route Info Distance 8-10 miles with 1,500 to 2,000 feet of climbing This is a solid intermediate cross country ski. It has a good mix of trail/road, climbing and distance. We start at Bennet Pass at ~4,650 feet and get on the Tie trail. This is a narrow trail and we drop about 400 feet vertically to 4,250 and the Pocket creek area The descent down to Pocket Creek should be fun but unfortunately often the snow is poor and instead it involves sidestepping, falling and occasional swearing. Tie trail in less than ideal conditions (which is most of the time)

Skinny lady working up the gentle “fat lady trail” Detailed Route Info We contour along a road staying relatively flat . We take this road a few miles until we get to the “corner” of the basin at ~4,200 feet. Now we climb. We climb up 1,000 feet on a logging road. This logging road is also known at “Fat Lady Trail” (so named by no woman skier ever) After much effort we work our way up to the Bennett Pass Ridge trail and hit the ridge at 5,200 feet. Skinny lady working up the gentle “fat lady trail”

The famed “Terrible Traverse” Detailed Route Info This is the far point and now we head back towards Bennett Pass and lose ~500 feet in the process It is all road tour coming back but the road is often filled with drifts and we have some famous Mount Hood ski sections to cross including the famed “Terrible Traverse” and S-curves. The last ½ mile or so in is easy and downhill. That part makes a pleasant finish. Note: If the Terrible Traverse is too dangerous then we’ll have to backtrack. Total mileage would then be ~12 miles. I think this option is unlikely. The famed “Terrible Traverse”

Email me if you have questions. Equipment This is a solid intermediate cross country ski tour. Ideally you should have 3 Pin or NNN-BC boots and metal edged backcountry skis. You will want the control for the descents If you just have NNN boots and non-metal edge skis then you are probably OK assuming you are reasonably experienced. Email me if you have questions.

Difficulty Rating Scale 5 4 3 2 1 5 4 3 2 1 5 4 3 2 1 Technical Skiing Ability Skiing Fitness Isolation/Risk

Estimated Timing 8:00 AM Departure from Gateway 9:45 AM Park at Bennett Sno-Park 10:15 AM Start Skiing 3:00 PM Finish Skiing 5:00 PM back at Gateway Note that if you need to rent skis you’ll need to rent them prior to the trip. It takes quite a while to rent and it doesn’t work to split the group and try and regroup when renting on the way

Maps There are always new trails being developed and the maps I have images for are not the most recent. Therefore, please consider these maps to be a rough guide at best. If you want to buy your own maps for this trip then the best one I’ve found for Mt. Hood is the 2015 Mt. Hood Winter Trails (BuyBetterMaps, Amazon or your local REI) The best overall reference books is still Klindt Vielbig’s. This is out of print but you can still find used copies on Amazon

Tour Starting Point We carpool from Gateway but we start skiing from Bennett Pass Sno-Park

Maps are from Klindt’s book

S F

GPS Track Link Bennet Pass Loop Track I like to use the site GPSies to store track. It is a free site and they have apps for mobile devices. Better yet you can export the GPX file to your GPS or favorite GPS Software My favorite Mobile phone GPS software is Gaia ($20). Example screen shot Gaia iPhone Software

Background Info

ONC Carpooling Policy If we don’t have drivers we don’t have a trip. If you have a snow compatible car then please drive. If we don’t have enough drivers then we’ll do a lottery to see who goes. For passengers, the ONC policy is each passenger contributes 15 cents per mile. For three or more passengers, the maximum total contribution by all passengers is limited to 45 cents per mile. A typical round trip distance to Mt Hood and back is 120 miles to 160 miles = $18-$24/person

ONC Ski Rating Novice level Beginning/Easy level Intermediate level These tours are for the inexperienced skiers. While this is not a lesson, the leader will help new skiers as much as possible. Tour length is 3-5 miles over nearly flat terrain. Beginning/Easy level 4 to 6 Miles over gentle terrain at a pace comfortable for all participants Intermediate level 6 to 12 miles. Terrain flat to long hills that are no steeper than found on a road (maximum 10 degrees). Moderate pace. Trail turning skills required, if there are hills. Advanced level > 12 miles. Terrain flat to steep hills (> 10 degrees). Moderate to fast pace. Strong turning skills required on the tours with steeper slopes.

What to Bring/Gear (click links below for more info) Ski Rental Options What to Wear Tour Essentials Note that if you need to rent skis you’ll need to rent them prior to the trip. It takes quite a while to rent and it doesn’t work to split the group and try and regroup when renting on the way

Weather Reports Obviously the tour gets cancelled if we don’t have enough snow. Additionally if it looks like it is just going to rain on us all day then we’ll cancel. I like to use the following site to check the weather. National Weather Service Zone Forecast. Good general description and snow level info. Mount Hood WebCams. Amar Andalkar does a great job at pulling together all the WebCams. For day tours I like to look to see how much snow there is in Government Camp Northwest Avalanche Center – Not applicable to the vast majority of ONC tours